US4886343A - Apparatus and method for additive/subtractive pixel arrangement in color mosaic displays - Google Patents
Apparatus and method for additive/subtractive pixel arrangement in color mosaic displays Download PDFInfo
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- US4886343A US4886343A US07/211,827 US21182788A US4886343A US 4886343 A US4886343 A US 4886343A US 21182788 A US21182788 A US 21182788A US 4886343 A US4886343 A US 4886343A
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- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02F—OPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
- G02F1/00—Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
- G02F1/01—Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour
- G02F1/13—Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells
- G02F1/133—Constructional arrangements; Operation of liquid crystal cells; Circuit arrangements
- G02F1/1333—Constructional arrangements; Manufacturing methods
- G02F1/1347—Arrangement of liquid crystal layers or cells in which the final condition of one light beam is achieved by the addition of the effects of two or more layers or cells
- G02F1/13475—Arrangement of liquid crystal layers or cells in which the final condition of one light beam is achieved by the addition of the effects of two or more layers or cells in which at least one liquid crystal cell or layer is doped with a pleochroic dye, e.g. GH-LC cell
Definitions
- This invention relates generally to flat panel color displays and, more particularly, to displays in which the image is the result of a mosaic of pixel regions.
- Liquid crystal mosaic display technology is being developed as a possible successor to color cathode ray tubes (CRTs) in many display applications, including those applications in the avionics field.
- This technology offers important advantages such as higher reliability along with reduced power, size and weight.
- capability of this technology for the rendering of an image falls short of the image capability achievable using CRT technology.
- This invention addresses three specific problem areas still remaining in liquid crystal mosaic displays: color definition; image resolution; and display brightness.
- color definition the liquid crystal mosaic display color rendition suffers from effects similar to those observed on a misaligned CRT display tube. The primary hues, the red, green and blue colors, do not blend properly.
- a white line for example, appears to have multicolored fringes, symptomatic of deficient color synthesis.
- Part of the problem can be attributed to the symbol generator which controls the formation of graphics on the flat panel.
- part of the problem can also be attributed to the display itself, a contribution addressed by this invention.
- the backlight technology includes the lamp and the electronics controlling the backlight lamp.
- the chief figure of merit for achieving a given level of brightness is how much power is needed to achieve that brightness level. Research is being aggressively pursued to make backlight technology more efficient.
- the present invention addresses the brightness problem from a different perspective.
- the pixel arrangement on the surface of the flat panel display can account for a considerable portion of the problem. Blue pixels contribute little to the total perceived luminance of the panel display. The photopic response of the eye accounts for this phenomenon.
- FIG. 1B illustrates that red and green radiation provide a larger contribution to perceived brightness than blue radiation. Blue radiation can typically provide only about a ten percent contribution to the overall brightness of the panel.
- FIG. 2 the effect of having blue pixels occupying space in the pixel arrangement is shown. Wherever a blue pixel is present, the effect on the pattern of pixels is to occlude the perceivable luminance passing through the display surface. No appreciable contribution to luminance capability is available at the sites of the blue pixels. As a result, these blue pixel regions of FIG. 2 can be considered as black regions. These regions occupy thirty percent of useful area in a typical Red/Green/Blue (RGB) pixel mosaic arrangement.
- RGB Red/Green/Blue
- liquid crystal mosaic displays In order to compete successfully with the cathode ray tube technology in a multiplicity of applications, the liquid crystal mosaic displays must evolve to the point where they efficiently achieve enough brightness to prevent bright sunshine from washing out displayed information. Additionally, they must also exhibit higher resolution and improved color mixture attributes for higher quality imagery to be displayed. Achieving these goals has proven difficult in the past.
- additive techniques use spatial proximity, temporal superposition or spatial superposition techniques to mix primary hues into different colors.
- Additive spatial proximity methods are the most common approach used in liquid crystal flat panel technology.
- FIG. 3 illustrates the basic technique of spatial proximity. Small dots (pixels) of primary colors, typically red, green and blue, are evenly dispersed across the surface of the flat panel display. If the dots (pixels) are small enough and close enough, then the eye fuses or integrates the contribution of each color dot together with its neighbors. The additive method can achieve enhanced resolution by making the pixels smaller and more densely packed.
- the differently colored pixels can be arranged into different patterns, in hopes of striking a better fit with the characteristics of the human visual system.
- Full color imagery is therefore perceived.
- Excellent resolution can result because each pixel is capable of full color control and full luminance control.
- Color definition is faulty in the case of computer generated imagery (unless signal processing methods are used) resulting in color fringing and rainbows effects.
- As the pixels are made smaller color integration is improved but light output is worsened because a greater percentage of the primary display area gets consumed by address lines and interconnecting conductors.
- blue contributes very little to perceived brightness yet consumes typically one quarter to one third the active display area as indicated previously. Blue also detracts from resolution capability, limiting edge definition and image sharpness.
- the three principal problems with this approach then are: (1 ) poor color integration and (2) wasted luminance and (3) wasted resolution.
- FIG. 4 shows one possible sequence.
- the red portion of the image is flashed on the flat panel display, then the green portion of the image is flashed on the flat panel display and, a short time later, the blue portion of the image is flashed on the flat panel display.
- Successful color synthesis using this temporal additive technique depends on the limited temporal frequency response of human vision. If the sequencing occurs rapidly enough, the eye cannot discern the separate primary hues, but, instead, perceives their overall integrated image.
- Temporal superposition suffers from smearing effects, jitter and image instability as the observer shifts his viewing position rapidly or vibration induces similar motion. In addition, todays liquid crystal materials exhibit such slow optical response times, rapid temporal sequencing using them is virtually impossible.
- additive spatial superposition methods separate images, each comprised of only one primary hue, are optically fused into one full color image.
- three images corresponding to red, green and blue hues, are used.
- These separate images are formed from three separate image sources.
- the output images of these three sources are then fused by optics into one full color image to be viewed by the observer (cf. FIG. 5).
- Excellent resolution is typical of this approach because each pixel is capable of full color and full luminance control.
- Brightness can also be high since three image forming sources are operated in parallel.
- Additive spatial superposition techniques suffer from complexity problems and performance difficulties. These systems also tend to be prohibitively large for many applications, especially those of the aerospace market. Cost generally rises due to the fact that three separate imaging devices are needed. Then additional hardware must be used to combine the three images. Frequently, this hardware must be extremely precise and rigid to maintain color purity.
- a liquid crystal display system in which a first panel has liquid crystal pixel elements that control the transmission of red and green image components and a second panel, aligned with the first panel for which liquid crystal pixel elements control the transmission blue image components therethrough.
- the first panel controls the red and green color components by additive spatial proximity techniques.
- the second panel controls the blue image component by subtractive techniques. Because of the reduced sensitivity of the eye to blue color components, the pixel array of the second panel can have diminished resolution and can have a diminished refresh rate compared to the first panel.
- FIG. 1A illustrates the eye's lower spatial frequency for blue as compared to other primary colors.
- FIG. 1B illustrates the reduced sensitivity to blue radiation as compared to radiation of the other primary colors.
- FIG. 2 illustrates the regions (blue pixels) that do not contribute to the mosaic display luminance.
- FIG. 3 illustrates how the eye integrates neighboring pixels to provide a full color spectrum from primary hues.
- FIG. 4A and FIG. 4B illustrate temporal integration of a sequence of primary color images to provide a complete image.
- FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating the development of an image using spatial superposition of image portions.
- FIG. 6 illustrates a controllable filter for creating a color image by removing selected portion of broad band optical transmission passing therethrough.
- FIG. 7 is a schematic diagram of a first panel of an additive/subtractive display panel of the present invention.
- FIG. 8A illustrates the passband characteristics of a magenta filter
- FIG. 8B shows the passband characteristics of a cyan filter
- 8C illustrates the passband characteristics of dichroic filter for transmitting blue light.
- FIG. 9 is a schematic diagram of a second panel of the additive/subtractive display of the present invention.
- FIG. 10 is a cross-sectional view of the additive/subtractive display system according to the present invention.
- FIG. 11 is a table illustrating the colors available with the additive/subtractive display panel of FIG. 10.
- FIG. 12 is a CIE diagram illustrating the colors that can be achieved using the additive subtractive display system of the present invention.
- the liquid crystal display has an MxN matrix of pixels, each pixel being addressed by one of M column conductors and one of N row conductors.
- the M column conductors are selected by x-axis column bus drive unit 2 in response to groups of address signals, Wx, and the N row conductors are selected by y-row bus drive unit 3 in response to groups of address signals, Wy.
- Wx groups of address signals
- y-row bus drive unit 3 in response to groups of address signals
- the intersection of activated column conductors and an activated row conductor activates the associated pixels along the row. Either active matrix methods or multiplexing methods can be used to activate the pixels, techniques known in the related art.
- active devices such as thin film transistors or metal insulator metal diodes are used as switching or non-linear devices to control the storage of charge across each pixel.
- no active device is present.
- the relationships of voltage signals on row bus lines with respect to voltages present on column bus lines controls charge storage across each pixel which in turn controls the state of the pixel (liquid crystal) optically active material. This method depends on the sharp electro-optical threshold of the liquid crystal material itself rather than on the threshold behavior of intervening electronic devices used in active matrices.
- FIG. 7 the color pixel arrangement of the top layer of the additive subtractive display is illustrated. Pixels of one complimentary primary hue, (magenta filter) pixel 4, for example, are distributed in a checkerboard pattern with pixels of another complimentary primary hue (cyan filter) pixel 5.
- the checkerboard pattern is used by way of example and is not meant to be limiting.
- the optical passband characteristics of the magenta and cyan filters are shown in FIG. 8A and 8B. No blue primary hue pixels are present in the pixel pattern of the top surface. The use of only magenta and cyan filter pixels leads to the resolution and brightness advantages described earlier in the disclosure.
- the second panel 6 of the additive/subtractive display is shown.
- the matrix is shown with half the number (M/2 ⁇ N/2) of rows and columns used in the first panel 1.
- This degraded resolution is possible because of the lower spatial resolution capability human vision has for blue light modulation as compared to red and green light modulation.
- the drive units and address waveforms used for second panel 6 can be identical to those used for the first panel 1.
- the refresh rate of images displayed on the second panel 6 can be lowered relative to the refresh rate of the first panel 1 because human vision is less sensitive to blue light in terms of temporal resolution as well as spatial resolution.
- red/green images When red/green images are displayed on a display device whose images decay with time, the red/green images need to be refreshed periodically at a typical frequency of 60 Hz.
- This critical fusion frequency allows the eye to integrate the flashing images into a steady scene absent of flicker or image decay. Blue light images can be seen without flicker at much lower refresh frequencies, 10 Hz for example. This phenomenon can be used to have the overall effect of lowering the drive requirements for the blue color portion of the system.
- each pixel 7 controls the passage of blue light through the display.
- Each pixel can block blue light from passing through or, alternatively, can be energized so blue light can pass through unimpeded.
- a guest host dichroic liquid crystal material (Merck ZLI2010 for example) is used.
- the passband characteristics of this liquid crystal material are shown in FIG. 8c.
- the passband spectral characteristic is variable and is a function of applied voltage. If voltage of one value is applied, then the passband is 9 as shown by FIG. 8c. No blue light is allowed to be transmitted.
- the additive/subtractive display unit 100 includes a glass plate 14 and a glass plate 13 which enclose a region 16 containing dichroic material combined with a liquid crystal material.
- Pixel control devices 10 in region 16 and pixel control devices 11 in region 12 are also shown.
- These pixel control devices 10 and 11 can be active matrix control devices (thin film transistors or metal/insulator/metal diodes for example) or, alternatively, can represent the intersection points of the row/column electrodes of multiplexed display technology described above.
- the blue control devices 10 are shown with twice the spacing and, therefore, half the resolution of the red/green control devices 11. This reduced element spacing reflects the physical differences of human vision resolution for resolving colors described previously.
- the resolution of the second panel 6 can be identical to that of the first panel 1. This configuration has the effect of adding a higher degree of fault tolerance capability in addition to increased blue light resolution capability.
- Several blue panel control devices and their associated blue pixels can be activated simultaneously in this configuration to cover the same area as a lower resolution blue control pixel.
- the blue panel control devices 10 provide control over each pixel, enabling the additive/subtractive display to control the passage of blue light over the area of each cell or pixel 7 of FIG. 9 in the matrix of the second panel 6. Each pixel can either permit white light or yellow light to pass through the second panel 6 to the first panel 1.
- the red/green control devices 11 control the passage of light through the top layer 1. The red/green control devices determine whether any light is free to pass through the red-blue (magenta) 4 and green-blue (cyan) 5 filters located on the color filter surface of the top panel 1. Consequently, this layer not only controls hue but, significantly, controls brightness. Each pixel can be controlled to render gray shades as well as hue. This capability builds on the advantageous methods for rendering gray shades established by additive technology and avoids the distinctly complex luminance/chrominance interrelationships manifest in subtractive technology, alone.
- the operating conditions of pixels in each panel needed to produce the display colors listed is shown. For example, if a black pixel 12 is desired, then the condition of the second panel 6 is inconsequential because any light passing through this panel will be blocked by the off condition of the magenta and cyan pixels in the first panel 1. If a white region 13 is desired, then one half of the pixels of the second panel 6 must be in the pass "yellow plus blue" (white) state and the magenta 4 and cyan 5 pixels in first panel 1 must be fully ON. Although the panel in actuality produces only discrete magenta and cyan pixels in this state, the eye fuses them into white because of the close proximity of these hues.
- the pixels must be small enough and close enough to fall within the integration zone of the eye.
- the second panel 6 In order to produce a red region 14, the second panel 6 must be placed in the yellow or minus blue state 9 shown in FIG. 8.
- the magenta pixels 4 in the first panel 1 must be ON and the cyan pixels 5 in the desired region must be placed in the OFF state.
- FIG. 12 a CIE color chart illustrating the range of colors which can be produced by gray level control of all pixels. If the blue control pixels 7 of the second panel 6 are varied from the pass blue state 8 plus 9 (all wavelengths are passed yielding white) to the block blue state 9, then each magenta pixel 4 moves from the magenta state to red along line 15 and each cyan pixel 5 moves from cyan to green along line 16 shown in FIG. 12. If blue is blocked entirely by pixels on layer 6, and if the cyan pixels 5 are ON and the magenta pixels are varied along a continuum from OFF to ON, then colors along line segment 17 will be produced, ending in yellow when the resultant green and red pixels are finally integrated by the eye.
- the present invention differs from prior art by tailoring the panel in better accord with the human visual system. Specifically, the invention addresses the fact that human vision relies almost exclusively on non-blue light, the red colors and the green colors, for spatial and intensity information. Further, the invention takes into account the fact that the eye uses blue light energy almost exclusively for chromatic information alone. Because blue light contributes very little to spatial detail and brightness, the invention removes blue light control from the principal display surface and dedicates this surface to the brighter and more resolvable red and green pixels. To achieve a wide range of colors, blue light control is placed behind the principal imaging layer, using techniques developed recently for the subtractive superpositional approach. Together, these two image planes add and subtract light to synthesize higher resolution, higher brightness images with a broad range of colors. The invention combines the simplicity and superior luminance control of one approach (additive juxtaposition) with the resolution enhancement of the second approach (superpositional subtractive).
- the display system of the present invention produces up to one third more luminance and resolution capability than predominant methods without incurring the volume and complexity cost of the other methods.
- Blue pixel control useful for color synthesis, but wasteful for brightness and image sharpness, is relegated to a secondary surface. This control leaves the primary display surface free to display the highly useful red and green pixels. These two display surfaces are sandwiched together into one compact flat panel display. Because imagery is not rapidly sequenced as a function of primary hue, the invention does not suffer from the temporal anomalies of temporal superposition approaches. Because it does not require recombination optics, it has a size advantage over spatial superposition methods. Finally, because it is primarily an additive display and uses only two imaging layers with blue on the secondary layer, it delivers more manageable luminance and color control, less complexity and parallax stability than the subtractive approach.
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Abstract
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Priority Applications (6)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US07/211,827 US4886343A (en) | 1988-06-20 | 1988-06-20 | Apparatus and method for additive/subtractive pixel arrangement in color mosaic displays |
DE68913084T DE68913084T2 (en) | 1988-06-20 | 1989-06-19 | Liquid crystal display unit and method for displaying an image with such a unit. |
ES89111071T ES2050188T3 (en) | 1988-06-20 | 1989-06-19 | LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY UNIT AND METHOD FOR VIEWING AN IMAGE WITH SUCH UNIT. |
EP89111071A EP0347790B1 (en) | 1988-06-20 | 1989-06-19 | Liquid crystal display unit and method for displaying an image with such unit |
CA000603226A CA1331408C (en) | 1988-06-20 | 1989-06-19 | Apparatus and method for additive/subtractive pixel arrangement in color mosaic displays |
JP1155995A JP2797199B2 (en) | 1988-06-20 | 1989-06-20 | Liquid crystal display device and display method |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
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US07/211,827 US4886343A (en) | 1988-06-20 | 1988-06-20 | Apparatus and method for additive/subtractive pixel arrangement in color mosaic displays |
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US4886343A true US4886343A (en) | 1989-12-12 |
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US07/211,827 Expired - Lifetime US4886343A (en) | 1988-06-20 | 1988-06-20 | Apparatus and method for additive/subtractive pixel arrangement in color mosaic displays |
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US (1) | US4886343A (en) |
EP (1) | EP0347790B1 (en) |
JP (1) | JP2797199B2 (en) |
CA (1) | CA1331408C (en) |
DE (1) | DE68913084T2 (en) |
ES (1) | ES2050188T3 (en) |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
EP0347790A2 (en) | 1989-12-27 |
DE68913084T2 (en) | 1994-07-14 |
EP0347790A3 (en) | 1990-08-22 |
EP0347790B1 (en) | 1994-02-16 |
ES2050188T3 (en) | 1994-05-16 |
JP2797199B2 (en) | 1998-09-17 |
CA1331408C (en) | 1994-08-09 |
JPH02110430A (en) | 1990-04-23 |
DE68913084D1 (en) | 1994-03-24 |
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